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DWI-Modern Day Salem
Witch Hunts
DWI-Modern
Day Salem Witch Hunts
By:
Mimi Coffey |
Judge
Daryl Coffey of County Criminal Court number 8, in Tarrant
County, Texas once remarked to me that all a prosecutor has to
do to win a DWI case is just make sure that the three letters
“DWI” are mentioned at least 15 times in a trial.1 It is
this type of environment that has allowed history to repeat
itself. All we have to do is look back to the Salem Witch Hunt
trials of 1692 where 19 convicted “witches” lost their
lives on “specter” evidence.2 Evidence in DWI trials has
not come a long way from 1692 where claims of apparitions only
visible to their victims were enough to get one hung. The
greatest challenge to DWI practitioners these days and to
those accused of DWI/DUI related crimes is that courtrooms
have not kept pace with the science. Bad science is
rubberstamped with approval by the majority of the judiciary
as long as the government sponsors it.
Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus
The horizontal gaze nystagmus test, or HGN, is alleged to be
77% accurate (80% accurate with the W&T) in determining if
a person is .10 BAC3 or more.4 The first problem with this
test is the particularity. Police officers are not
ophthalmologists trained in the detection of eye movements and
or eye pathologies. There are forty-seven types of nystagmus
in individuals, separate from Horizontal Nystagmus:
(1) Acquired; (2) Anticipatory (induced); (3) Arthrokinetic
(induced, somatosensory); (4) Associated (induced,
Stransky’s); (5) Audio kinetic (induced); (6) Bartel’s
(induced); (7) Brun’s; (8) Centripetal; (9) Cervical (neck
torsion, vestibular-basilar artery insufficiency); (10)
Circular/Elliptic/Oblique (alternating windmill, circumduction,
diagonal, elliptic, gyratory, oblique, radiary); (11)
Congenital (fixation, hereditary); (12) Convergence; (13)
Convergence-evoked; (14) Dissociated (disjunctive); (15)
Downbeat; (16) Drug-induced (barbituate, bow tie, induced);
(17) Epileptic (ictal); (18) Flash induced; (19) Gaze-evoked
(deviational, gaze-paretic, neurasthenic, seducible,
setting-in); (20) Horizontal; (21) Induced (provoked); (22)
Intermittent Vertical; (23) Jerk; (24) Latent/Manifest Latent
(monocular fixation, unimacular); (25) Lateral Medullary; (26)
Lid; (27) Miner’s (occupational); (28) Muscle-Paretic (myasthenic);
(29) Optokinetic (induced, optomotor, panoramic, railway,
sigma); (30) Optokinetic After-Induced (post-optokinetic,
reverse post-optokinetic); (31) Pendular (talantropia); (32)
Periodic/Aperiodic Alternating; (33) Physiologic (end-point,
fatigue); (34) Pursuit After-induced; (35) Pursuit Defect;
(36) Pseudo spontaneous; (37) Rebound; (38) Reflex (Baer’s);
(39) See-Saw; (40) Somatosensory; (41) Spontaneous; (42)
Stepping Around; (43) Torsional; (44) Uniocular; (45) Upbeat;
(46) Vertical; (47) Vestibular (ageotropic, geotropic,
Bechterew’s, caloric, compensatory,
electrical/faradic/galvanic, labyrinthine,
pneumatic/compression, positional/alcohol, pseudo caloric.5
It is unrealistic given this extensive laundry list -which
includes medical conditions- that a police officer can make
the important distinction that he is indeed observing
horizontal gaze nystagmus. Even if he could, the next issue is
causation. Officers jump to an incorrect premise that if they
do isolate horizontal gaze nystagmus this must be indicative
of ethanol intoxication. There are actually 38 different
causes of horizontal gaze nystagmus unrelated to alcohol as
judicially recognized in Schultz v. State:
(1) problems with the inner ear labyrinth; (2) irrigating the
ears with warm or cold water under peculiar weather
conditions; (3) influenza; (4) streptococcus infection; (5)
vertigo; (6) measles; (7) syphilis; (8) arteriosclerosis; (9)
muscular dystrophy; (10) multiple sclerosis; (11) Korchaff’s
syndrome; (12) brain hemorrhage; (13) epilepsy; (14)
hypertension; (15) motion sickness; (16) sunstroke; (17)
eyestrain; (18) eye muscle fatigue; (19) glaucoma; (20)
changes in atmospheric pressure; (21) consumption of excessive
amounts of caffeine; (22) excessive exposure to nicotine; (23)
aspirin; (24) circadian rhythms; (25) acute trauma to the
head; (26) chronic trauma to the head; (27) some prescription
drugs, tranquilizers, pain medications, anti-convulsants; (28)
barbiturates; (29) disorders of the vestibular apparatus and
brain stem; (30) cerebellum dysfunction; (31) heredity; (32)
diet; (33) toxins; (34) exposure to solvents, PCBs,
dry-cleaning fumes, carbon monoxide; (35) extreme chilling;
(36) lesions; (37) continuous movement of the visual field
past the eyes; and, (38) antihistamine use.6
Another real problem with the horizontal gaze nystagmus test
is the timing of its presence and an actual alcohol
concentration. The HGN, as administered by the National
Highway Transportation Safety Administration’s (NHTSA)
protocol for the Standarized Field Sobriety Tests (SFST) has
been cited as the only reliable index of blood alcohol when
examined for its ability to distinguish BACs under and over
.04% within the .00-.08% range.7 So it is a fallacy to use
this test to determine that someone may be over .08 BAC. What
is also alarming is the fact that nystagmus can remain for
some time once the BAC has reached .000. In a dose/response
study of 89 subjects,8 62% of the dosed subjects exhibited
nystagmus in one or both eyes at BAC levels of .00% when
tested immediately after all alcohol was cleared from their
blood and 56% of those subjects still exhibited nystagmus one
hour later.9 In the same study, it was determined from 66
healthy, well-rested subjects10 who did not consume any
alcohol and completed 5.5 to 8.0 hours of sleep after being
awake for 9 to 14.5 hours (average 11.2) that they had
distinct nystagmus in one or both eyes.11 Afterwards these
same subjects were re-examined with an average awake time of
24.5 hours and distinct end position nystagmus was observed in
one or both eyes in 55% of the group.12 What is particularly
troublesome is the stamp of imprimatur by the American
Optometric Association13 touted by prosecutors in laying the
foundation for the test ’ s admissibility.14 It is important
to distinguish that no such resolution of acceptance for the
HGN exists by the American Academy of Ophthalmology. It is
unsettling how eager the American Optometric Association has
been to embrace the possibility of providing expert testimony
as a puppet of the government without any legitimate
scientific inquiry of their own. The seminal scientific
research article on HGN states it best:
In an article designed to inform optometrists how to provide
expert testimony on the HGNT (HGN), the only evidence of a
correlation between BAC and nystagmus given is a reference to
the NHTSA’s work. Specifically the article stated “through
a series of studies, the National Highway Traffic and Safety
Administration (NHTSA) has been able to establish a high
correlation between alcohol concentrations in the body and
performance on a series of field sobriety tests.” It is
interesting, and perhaps revealing, that no other evidence is
referenced to support this correlation.15
One only needs to look at the criticism of NHTSA = s
foundational research16 -which led to the development of the
HGN test- to understand that this is yet another example of
agenda government science which misses the mark. It is
interesting to note that researchers have determined that
percentages generally cited by the courts in support of HGN
exist only in NHTSA publications.17 Jurists and prosecutors in
the United States have been quick to embrace the HGN test as
hardcore science but this component has not been adopted by
Great Britain.
Standardized Field Sobriety Tests
Outside of the HGN, DWI cases concentrate on psychomotor
skills known as standardized field sobriety tests; but just
how good are these tests? This requires some basic
understanding of testing fundamentals. The first incorrect
presumption with this framework is that these tests measure
impairment related to driving. They do not.18 The walk and
turn and one leg stand are purported to have “face
validity,”19 that is the tests relate to actual driving
tasks. Face validity is the lowest form of validity a
researcher can achieve and is generally not accepted by
academia because “face validity rests on the
investigator’s subjective evaluation of the appropriateness
of the instrument for measuring the concept rather than
whether the instrument measures what the researcher wishes to
measure.”20 For a test to be valid, there must be high
reliability and validity both measured by a correlation
coefficient ranging from 0 to 1.0 (highest end of the
scale).21 Reliability relates to the consistency of scores
based on re-testing. Validity relates to the ability of a test
to predict particular benchmarks. Intelligence tests such as
the Wechsler Intelligence Test have a reliability of .90.
According to the 1977 SCRI study which developed the 3 part
standardized field sobriety tests the validity correlation
coefficient22 was .48, the walk and turn was .55.23 In layman
= s terms what this means is that using a one leg stand to
predict a .10 BAC is only 25% better than chance.24 The HGN
interestingly enough had only a correlation coefficient of .67
equating to an approximate 33% better prediction than
chance.25 Use of the walk and turn is only 27-28% better than
chance.26 The overall error rate (wrong percentage of
decisions to arrest) was 47%.27 In 1981, laboratory field
sobriety tests (this time just the HGN, walk and turn, and one
leg stand) were researched again and the error rate was found
to be 32%.28 Validity correlation coefficients were not
mentioned in this study. Reliability correlation coefficients
were given for this study: HGN .66, walk and turn .72.29 For a
test to be reliable the coefficient must be .85 or higher.30
When different officers performed the test on the same subject
at the same BAC the coefficients dropped down to .59 for the
HGN and .34 for the walk and turn, to whit a 66% error rate
was indicated for the walk and turn and the one leg stand
error rate equated to a 40%.31 Dr. Burns herself indicated
that the > 77 and > 81 error rates were unacceptable.32
In response to a cross-examination question as to whether 32%
was acceptable, she replied, “It is getting there.”33 This
is the meat and potatoes of what still exists today.
Once one gets over the initial shock of how unacceptable these
tests are according to government research the next logical
step is to look at the relevant scientific peer review
community. Dr. Spurgeon Cole and Ronald Nowaczyk did just that
in 1994 in a field sobriety study sponsored by Clemson
University. According to this study, field sobriety tests
which included the walk and turn and one leg stand test were
compared to normal tasks such as reciting basic information
and walking in normal manner for 21 sober individuals all with
a BAC of .000. Forty-six percent of the officers determined
the subjects intoxicated by SFST(s) with only fifteen percent
of said subjects determined to be intoxicated by normal
tests.34 The promulgation of these tests, the HGN, walk and
turn and one leg stand may be good enough for government work
but are a far cry from reliable, scientific standards. Because
of this, innocent people are being convicted every day on
these premises, which are taken at face value and not
questioned despite their invalidity. When most states lowered
legal limits to .08, the government found itself in a quandary
of which they still have not been able to solve; hence, the
continuation of the misleading 1981 percentages of accuracy:
HGN 77%, walk and turn 68%, one leg stand 65%.35 The
Colorado,36 Florida37 and San Diego38 studies attempted to
quantify accuracy at .08 but none proved worthy of the
mission. Such roadblocks as documented by Steve Rubenzer, Ph.D,
included but were not limited to the following critiques:
1. The field studies validated the arrest decisions of the
officers in the studies, not the SFSTs.
2. The police officers and the degree of supervision in the
field studies were not typical of typical DWI stops.
3. The studies were insufficiently documented for scientific
papers as cited in U.S. v. Horn, 185 F. Supp.2d 530, 558 (D.
Md. 2002).
4. The authors did not report the accuracy of arrest decisions
for stops that were observed vs. those that were not, or for
SFSTs performed under adverse climate conditions versus those
that were not.39
The new purported levels of accuracy in the recent validation
studies regarding the same field tests at lower limits are
proof of the tests = inherent low reliability correlation
coefficient. How these statistically unreliable and invalid
tests are somehow more purportedly valid at lower limits is
yet proof positive how radical the DWI religion has become to
lawmakers and jurists alike in blind disregard of the science.
Leading Jurisdictions
Despite ignorant, widespread acceptance of the validity of the
HGN, walk and turn and one-leg stand tests, there are some
jurisdictions which have started down a very unpopular but
judiciously righteous path in respect of scientific principles
and constitutional liberty. In Homan v. State, the court
determined that in order for the results of a field sobriety
test to serve as evidence of probable cause to arrest, the
police must have administered the test in strict compliance
with standardized testing procedures .40 The court at least
recognized that “testing” requires standardization and not
haphazard administration if scoring criteria is to be used.
What is key in this case is the court = s threshold
requirements merely address admissibility at the probable
cause level. The mistake in Homan is to give the standardized
tests any scientific evidentiary value at all. It however at
least recognizes that adherence to protocol is necessary to
admissibility as opposed to weight. In U.S. v. Horn, Judge
Grimm wrote:
There is no factual basis before me to support the NHTSA
claims of accuracy for the WAT and OLS tests or to support the
conclusions about the total number of standardized clues that
should be looked for or that are missing a stated number means
the subject failed the test. There is very little before me
that suggests that the WAT and OLS tests are anything more
than standardized procedures police officers use to enable
them to observe a suspect = s coordination, balance,
concentration, speech, ability to follow instructions, mood
and general physical condition--all of which are visual cues
that laypersons, using ordinary experience, associate with
reaching opinions about whether someone has been drinking.41
Some of the more notable premises the Horn case stands for are
that 1) The results of properly conducted tests may be
considered for probable cause.42 2) The SFST(s) cannot be
correlated with a specific BAC43 3) The court where requested
by counsel should take judicial notice of the fact that there
are many causes of HGN outside of alcohol.44 4) Value added
descriptive language regarding the SFST(s) such as “failed
the test,” “exhibited” a certain number of
“standardized clues” or any other bolstering attempts by
the officer is not allowed.45 SFST(s) or any specialized
information learned from law enforcement or traffic safety
instruction should not be referred to as scientific, technical
or specialized.46 Judge Paul Grimm, much like Governor William
Phipps of Salem Massachusetts who suspended the special court
of Oyer and Terminer,47 which based convictions on specious
“specter” evidence, has through his opinion echoed some
reason and common sense that is necessary in a court of law in
the wake of mass hysteria over DWI prosecutions. Special
recognition goes to courts responsible for cases like State v.
Doriguzzi,48 where HGN was ruled not admissible because the
State had failed to show Frye acceptance and reliability and
Young v. City of Brookhaven,49 where the HGN test was ruled as
a scientific test but not one generally accepted by the
scientific community. These courts provide hope in proving
that science is the voice of reason and we have a long way to
go in spreading such reason to all parts of the country
because science has no jurisdictional bounds.
Special thanks to:
Dr. Ron Henson of Beron Consulting and Lab Works, Peoria, Il.
Richard Essen of Essen, Essen, Susaneck, Canet, & Goodis
P.A., Aventura FL 33180 (and paralegal Jason Hedges), Dr. Joe
Citron, Atlanta, Ga.
Steve Oberman, Law Office of Steve Oberman, Knoxville, Tn.
Notes
1Unlike most jurists, Judge Coffey has a scientific
background- a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture from Western
Kentucky University.
2 See Rosemary Ellen Guiley, The Encyclopedia of Witches and
Witchcraft, 234-299 (1989).
3 Indicating the chemical concentration of alcohol in the
blood as being greater than .10%.
4See V. Tharp, M. Burns, and H. Moskowitz, Development and
Field Test of Psychophysical Tests for DWI Arrest,
DOT-HS-805-864, U.S. Department of Transportation, NHTSA,
Washington (1981).
5 Dr. L. F. Dell = Osso, Nystagmus, Saccadic
Intrusions/Oscillations and Oscillopsia, 3 Current Neuro-Ophthalmology
147 (1989).
6 Schultz v. State, 664 A.2d 60, 77 (Md. App. 1995).
7See A.J. McKnight, ET AL., Sobriety Tests for Low Blood
Alcohol Concentrations, Accid. Anal. Prev. 2002 May; 34(3):
305-11.
8See J.L. Booker, End-position nystagmus as an indicator of
ethanol intoxication, 41 Science and Justice 113, 115 (2001).
(79 men and 10 women between the ages of 22 and 67 who were
well rested and in good health, alcohol levels determined by
blood and urine assays conducted by gas chromatography and
breath concentrations determined by CMI Intoxilyzer 5000
instruments with wet-bath reference units operated at 34 E C).
9 See Id. at 115.
10See Id. at 114-15. ( The study consisted of 44 men and 22
women between the ages of 20 and 57 who denied use of alcohol
or drugs within the preceding 24 hours).
11 See Id. at 115.
12 See Id. at 115.
13 See Karl Citek, HGN and the role of the Optometrist, in
Admissibility of Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus Evidence: Targeting
Hardcore Impaired Drivers, 15 (Am. Prosecutors Research Inst.
2003). (The following resolution was adopted by the American
Optometric Association House of Delegates, on June 1993:
Whereas drivers under the influence of alcohol pose a
significant threat to the public health, safety, and welfare;
and
Whereas optometric scientists and the National Highway and
Traffic Safety Administration have shown the Horizontal Gaze
Nystagmus (HGN) test to be a scientifically valid and reliable
tool for trained police officers to use in field sobriety
testing; now therefore be it
Resolved that the American Optometric Association acknowledges
the scientific validity and reliability of the HGN test as a
field sobriety test when administered by properly trained and
certified police officers; and be it further
Resolved that the American Optometric Association urges
doctors of optometry to become involved as professional
consultants in the use of HGN field sobriety testing.)
14 See Predicate Questions: Optometrist....Appendix K (visited
June 18, 2004) < http://nhtsa.com/people/injury/enforce/nystagmus/app_k.html>.
( Direct Examination questions for the state’s expert
optometrist end with: 88. Are you familiar with the 1993
resolution "Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus as a Field Sobriety
Test" passed by the House of Delegates of the American
Optometric Association? 89. Is this a copy of the resolution?
90. Please read it to the court).
15 Charles R. Honts, Susan L. Amato-Henderson, Horizontal Gaze
Nystagmus Test: The State of the Science in 1995, 71 N.D.
L.Rev. 671 at 6 (1995). (citing David V. Tiffany, Optometric
Expert Testimony: Foundation for the Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus
Test, 57 J. of Amer. Optometric Ass = n 705 (1986)).
16 See Id. at 15.
17 See Joseph R. Meaney, Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus: A Closer
Look, 36 Jurimetrics J. 383, 385 (1996).
18 Jack Stuster and Marcelline Burns, Validation of the
Standardized Field Sobriety Test Battery at BACs Below 0.10
Percent, DOT-HS-808-839 6, (1998).
19 See Id . at 27-28.
20 Chava Frankfort-Nachmias & David Nachmias, Research
Methods in the Social Sciences, 150 (6th ed. Worth Pub. 2000).
21 See Trial Transcript at 14-16, later reported as State v.
Meador , 674 So.2d 826 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1996) .
22 See Id. at 21, (The formula is actually the square root of
1.48.).
23 See Id. at 20.
24 See Id. at 21.
25 See Id. at 20, 22.
26 See Id. at 22.
27 See Id. at 29.
28 See Id. at 37.
29 See Id. at 42.
30 See R. Rosenthal & R.L. Rosnow, Essentials of
behavioral research: methods and data analysis (2 nd ed.
McGraw-Hill 1991).
31 See Meador, supra note 21, at 31.
32 See Id. at 141.
33 Id. at 141.
34 See Spurgeon C. Cole & Ronald H. Nowaczyk, Field
Sobriety Tests: Are They Designed for Failure?, Perceptual and
Motor Skills, 79, 99-104, (1994).
35 See Tharp, supra note 4.
36 See Anderson, Ellen and Marcelline Burns, PH.D., A Colorado
Validation Study of the Standardized Field Sobriety Test (SFST)
Battery, November 1995.
37 See Dioquino, Sgt. Teresa, ET AL., A Florida Validation
Study of the Standardized Field Sobriety (SFST) Battery, (date
of publication is unknown).
38 See Burns, supra note 18.
39 See Steven Rubenzer, DWI- Part 1 The Psychometrics and
Science of Standardized Field Sobriety Tests, The Champion,
May 2003, at 24-34.
40 See Homan v. State, 89 Ohio St.3d 421 (2000). Most
unfortunately, and without any respect for scientific
realities this case was later abrogated by legislation.
41 U.S. v. Horn , 185 F. Supp. 2d 530, 557 (D. Md. 2002).
42 See Id. at 532-33.
43 See Id. at 533.
44 See Id. at 533.
45 See Id. at 533.
46 See Id. at 533-34.
47 See Guiley, supra note 2 at 299.
48 334 N.J. Super. 530 (App. Div. 2000)
49 693 So.2d 1355 (Miss. 1997).
As published in the National Association of Criminal Defense
Lawyers magazine, "The Champion". November, 2004 |
MIMI COFFEY
FORT WORTH DWI TRIAL
ATTORNEY
(817) 831- 3100 |
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